DAGGERS have been drawn between President Emmerson
Mnangagwa’s ruling Zanu PF and the Nelson Chamisa-led MDC over the latter’s
Friday protests, with Zanu PF political commissar and Defence deputy minister
Victor Matemadanda vowing to block the planned demonstrations.
This comes as Mnangagwa yesterday pleaded for peaceful
co-existence amid citizens of diverse political persuasions.
Addressing thousands of people at the national Heroes Day
commemorations in Harare, Mnangagwa said economic recovery would only take
place in a peaceful
environment.
The MDC has set Friday as the start of a series of protests
against Mnangagwa’s alleged mismanagement of the economy, which has pushed
inflation to new highs amid biting shortages of currency, fuel and electricity.
While the MDC yesterday insisted that they were going ahead
with their planned protests even without a police clearance, Matemadanda told
NewsDay that
government would stand in their way and ensure no
demonstrations take place against Mnangagwa’s administration.
“They (MDC) are saying they will demonstrate, but I am
telling you that they will not because I know they will not,” Matemadanda told
NewsDay on the sidelines
of the Heroes Day commemorations at the National Heroes
Acre in Harare yesterday.
“If they are going to be peaceful, there is no problem, but
we know they have no capacity to demonstrate peacefully. They will preach
peaceful demonstrations,
only to be violent. We saw what they did in January as well
as just after the elections,” he said in reference to the August 1, 2018 and
January 14-16
protests, which later turned fatal after security agents
fired live ammunition on unarmed protesters.
On several occasions, Matemadanda, who also doubles as war
veterans secretary-general, has threatened to unleash the military to stop
opposition protests.
The military was deployed to quell the August 1, 2018
post-election violence and January 2019 protests over a 150% fuel price hike
and the end result was the
death of 23 civilians on the two occasions.
The killings dented Mnangagwa’s international re-engagement
efforts after initially promising the international community that he would not
be like his
predecessor, Robert Mugabe, who was slapped with Western
sanctions over gross human rights abuses.
“We (government) cannot allow them to loot and destroy
property. When war veterans were teargassed by the Mugabe government, they were
not destroying anything,
so there cannot be any comparison to what they want to do,”
Matemadanda added.
But MDC spokesperson Daniel Molokele said the protests
would go ahead and preparations were at an advanced stage.
“The protests are going ahead. We are definitely going
ahead,” Molokele said. “This is a peaceful march, where we are simply saying
enough is enough on the
suffering of the people and the government has failed. We
need an all-stakeholders conference to take the country forward.”
He added that they had already notified the police as per
requirements of the Public Order and Security Act (Posa).
“We applied and the police have not yet responded, but
according to Posa, one simply needs to make a notification. Police do not have
any power to stop the
protest. They will only get involved when the protest
becomes violent.”
The MDC claimed it had ring-fenced its planned protest
march against infiltration by engaging peace marshals, in addition to
electronically monitoring the
event following threats by Zanu PF youths to disrupt the
proceedings.
Zanu PF youth leader Pupurai Togarepi recently was on
record threatening to unleash his troops to stop the MDC protests.
At the national shrine, Mnangagwa, however, pleaded with
the restive population, which has borne the brunt of economic stagnation, to be
patient and peaceful
while his government implements policies to turn around the
country’s economic fortunes.
“As I alluded before, the austerity measures we have
undertaken are certainly necessary to guarantee sustainable development and
prosperity for our country. To
desire quick-fix manoeuvres neglecting fundamentals will be
grossly dishonest and a betrayal to the future prospects of our children,”
Mnangagwa said.
“I, thus, wish to thank people for their resilience and to
further urge them to bear with us as we complete this crucial phase of our
policy reforms. Together
and with unity of purpose, we shall succeed.
“Allow me, on that note, to express my profound gratitude
to all Zimbabweans for their patience and resilience, often against incredible
odds, during this
period of the reform process. The economic reforms are
necessary to right-size the economy and reset it for sustainable economic
development. Going forward, my
government is now concentrating on increasing production
efficiencies across all the sectors of the economy, starting with agriculture,
which is the mainstay
of the economy.”
Mnangagwa said Zimbabwe should cherish the peace and
stability brought about by the liberation struggle, and urged the country to
jealously guard it.
“The experience of war makes people value peace all the
more,” Mnangagwa said.
“As such, the defence of the peace and stability we enjoy
is paramount and must be undertaken with valour and vigilance. For this reason,
violence must
continue to be shunned and rejected.
“We shall continue to protect our independence, freedom,
justice and democracy which our departed heroes fought for, by accelerating
efforts to consolidate
constitutionalism, the rule of law by strengthening
institutions that support democracy. We shall, with greater resolve, protect
constitutionally-enshrined rights, fully cognisant, however, of the fact that
the enjoyment of such rights is not absolute.”
Mnangagwa added that only dialogue and constructive
engagement must be promoted as the centre-piece of national development.
He said his government was making all necessary
interventions to ensure that no one dies from hunger following a disastrous
agricultural season. Newsday
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